Douglas Axe Type post Date November 6, 2020 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , chemists, computer simulation, design principles, Douglas Axe, evolution, golf, golf ball, Hamlet, Harvard University, intelligent design, Jonathan Witt, Michael Behe, National Academy of Sciences, natural selection, optimization, PNAS, polypeptides, protein evolution, proteins, Richard Dawkins, syllogism, Undeniable (book), Weasel program Are Proteins Attracted to Function? Science and Culture November 6, 2020 Evolution, Intelligent Design 10 Doug Axe showed that functional space is a tiny fraction of sequence space in proteins. Evolutionists think they found a shortcut. Read More ›
Gray220 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 5, 2020 CategoriesBiologyEngineeringIntelligent Design Tagged , __edited, "poor design", adaptation, anti-fragility, biological origins, Center for Science and Culture, Conference on Engineering in Living Systems, design principles, Engineering Research Group, engineers, evolutionists, failure prevention, human body, intelligent design, resilience, Steve Laufmann Join Us: Conference on Engineering in Living Systems, April 23-25, in Southern California David Klinghoffer February 5, 2020 Biology, Engineering, Intelligent Design 3 The most spectacular example of an engineered living system is the human body, toward the invention of which the whole cosmos appears to have been very carefully aimed. Read More ›